An excellent 7-minute whistle stop tour, departing from

the first ‘legal’ Gulf War in 1990, with UN approval

passing through the second ‘illegal’ Gulf War from 2003, with no UN backing

to the third WTF Gulf war of 2026 where…

“Washington is increasingly unable to secure broader support for its own goals, increasingly unable to achieve its goals, and increasingly unable to say what those goals might be”

#iran

https://overcast.fm/+8dw_1Tf8Y

The Third Gulf War — Macrodose

On this week's Macrodose, James Meadway looks at how the ongoing Iran war forms part of a longer story of US decline (0:45), why a direct consequence of the war is higher borrowing costs for government (7:50), and what the UK government actually doing in response to the crisis (12:22).Subscribe to support the show at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠patreon.com/Macrodose.⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Your pledge is a donation supporting free public education; perks are thank-you gifts for your support.Got a question or comment? Reach out to us at ⁠[email protected]⁠.To learn more about the work we do at Planet B Productions, head to ⁠planetbproductions.co.uk⁠.Listen to Death In Westminster - a new documentary podcast from Planet B Productions & Novara Media: https://novaramedia.com/category/audio/death-in-westminster/#the-station

…The narrative draws upon

‘The Three Gulf Wars of American Hegemony: tracking the decay of the unipolar moment’

by Seva Gunitsky, an associate professor of political science at the University of Toronto
https://hegemon.substack.com/p/the-three-gulf-wars-of-american-hegemony

The Three Gulf Wars of American Hegemony

tracking the decay of the unipolar moment

Hegemon

…What follows James Meadway’s Gulf War tour is an excellent 4-minute segment setting out the parameters of government borrowing and along the way the limits of MMT, in a way that is easy to follow for an economics layperson like me.

Transcribed below (look, Ma, no LLMs used to do so!)…

…1/9
“One of the war’s immediate consequences is the rise in gov borrowing costs across much of the world and most definitely in the UK, which saw its gov borrowing costs rise to 5% and above.

The reason is the UK is highly exposed to the rest of the world.

We import 40% of our food, 50% of the natural gas we use, and about 60% of our fertiliser.

And our gov owes about a third of its debt to people and institutions in the rest of the world. An unusually high level for a ‘developed’ country…

…2/9

“That combination is deadly. The heavy reliance on imports of essentials means we need a valuable Pound to make sure we can buy those imports without having to exchange too much of what we produce here in return.

At the same time the large foreign ownership of UK government debt means people with no commitment to this country can choose to buy or sell that debt as and when they feel like, creating a big instability in government borrowing costs and potentially the value of the Pound…

…3/9

“If the people and institutions lending money fear that the government will end up with big expenses it can’t cover, like providing support for household energy bills, they will start to force up the cost of government borrowing.

Now there’s a story doing the rounds that this doesn’t matter. That since the UK can issue its own currency, the government can always repay any debt, and can always pay for anything it wants in that currency…

…4/9

“Some of you might recognise this as the sort of story associated with Modern Monetary Theory (MMT).

In a *very* limited sense it is correct. In principle the gov can issue money and offer it in payment for anything it wants. Its problem is that people might not want this money or, if they do, they might want a great deal of it.

And when the whole UK has to import so much of the essentials of life, the willingness of other people elsewhere in the world to accept the Pound really matters…

@urlyman
Yes, MMT is a USA centric dogma, and even there with the US dollar as international reserve currency, there are limits, as we'll see as this war goes on, as explored here: https://www.middleeasteye.net/opinion/suez-sounded-death-knell-british-empire-hormuz-may-do-same-us
Suez was the death knell for the British empire. Hormuz may do the same for the US

As confrontation with Iran escalates, Washington risks repeating the 1956 Suez crisis, which hastened the end of sterling as a global reserve currency and forced imperial retreat

Middle East Eye
@markhburton pretty great headline and opening paragraph.